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"editorialize" Definitions
  1. [intransitive] to express your opinions rather than just reporting the news or giving the facts
  2. [intransitive] (North American English) to express an opinion in an editorial

66 Sentences With "editorialize"

How to use editorialize in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "editorialize" and check conjugation/comparative form for "editorialize". Mastering all the usages of "editorialize" from sentence examples published by news publications.

This writer, however, wasn't afraid to editorialize — and with abandon.
Smartly, Donnelly and Toscano don't overly editorialize in this chapter.
It is into this vacuum that the temptation to editorialize arises.
But some of the inmates would editorialize in their own way.
This is, I'm going to editorialize, but I'm free to do it.
"I think we have to resist the impulse to editorialize," said Maryland Rep.
At the same time, the goal of these was not to really editorialize.
But it's clear that the edits editorialize the incident to make Acosta look more aggressive.
Allow me to editorialize here: WWHL introduced a new type of late night talk show.
Will the Post editorialize in favor of an environmental tax on wind and solar power?
The video appeared to editorialize the incident to justify the removal of Acosta's press pass.
Every big newspaper and cable news channel has staff who openly editorialize and push political messages.
The film doesn't editorialize much, about the work or the controversy, but its title says enough.
Reichert does not editorialize, because merely allowing her questions and their answers to be heard is sufficient.
Well, fitting rooms simply aren't the place to editorialize about what someone should or shouldn't be wearing.
"This is not a case to review or to editorialize" about the Obergefell decision, the court wrote.
What about those tweets falls outside her mandate to analyze and editorialize the day’s sports news?
If they want to make up stuff and editorialize, that&aposs okay, but they can&apost recognize the facts.
In media's haste to participate and editorialize in this trend, we're calling simple gold chains with pendants, charm necklaces.
As such, I can only editorialize that Fulks doesn't seem to be interested in money or an official credit.
It violates Justice Department policy to editorialize on conduct once it has determined that charges will not be pursued.
Say what you want about the rising cost of "Entry fees," but Mr. Chen is not here to editorialize (much).
"I'm in no position to editorialize about solar power or any kind of renewable power," Letterman said in the promo.
Can Mr. Osborne, who campaigned for the Remain side in last year's Brexit referendum, editorialize one way and vote the other?
I think when the level of effort is high, the story speaks for itself, and you don't have to ridicule and editorialize.
It's not the place of the actors to editorialize on the play they just mounted, or to single out a particular audience member.
"I don't editorialize, I don't put voice over, I don't try to tell people what to think about it," Refsdal said of his film.
It's only at this point that the movie seems to overtly editorialize, with its electronic music score (by Brian McOmber) growing more low-key and menacing.
"Now that so many people are shopping online, the ability to editorialize is what attracts customers," said Ken Downing, the store's fashion director and senior vice president.
Short version: Lauer didn't editorialize against Trump for X, Y, Z (which wasn't his job) while having the audacity to press Clinton on her mishandling over classified information.
She could damn well editorialize anything if she wanted to, like that time she convinced Doug he was thin by way of method acting (think it to feel it).
One of the more remarkable exchanges in the interview starts when Dobbs decides that instead of asking a question, he'll just editorialize that critics of Trump's China policy are mistaken.
" Manchin said he believes the American people must have "unequivocal confidence" in the attorney general and know he is "beyond any kind of reproach of any kind and should not editorialize whatsoever.
However, according to Mr. Clarke, it is not clear that even The Sun will editorialize in favor of leaving the European Union, particularly if it calculates that voters will opt to remain.
Though she doesn't really editorialize in the book, her hope is that by making it accessible and aesthetically interesting, she can spark conversations about why these objects need to exist in the first place.
" When Gupta reiterates that, yes, Donald Trump said pregnancy was an inconvenience, Trump responds, "There's plenty of time for you to editorialize around this, but I think he put forth a really incredible plan.
Presented with the source of her father's quote -- an NBC interview in 2004 -- Trump shot back that "there's plenty of time for you to editorialize around this," and again pitched the campaign's new childcare policy.
Conservatives might editorialize about it more, but liberal presidents arguably advanced free trade the most, from Bill Clinton's signing of the North American Free Trade Agreement to Barack Obama's negotiation of the Trans-Pacific Partnership.
The combination of traditional and digital media in this project pushes students to editorialize a text not only with what they draw, but also with how they draw it, by playing with composition, line and color.
"To editorialize, I am hoping that the Department for Children and Families rethinks its mission to be the punisher of addicted mothers, the separator of families and the arbiter of children's futures, and instead embrace a mission of enhanced rehabilitation," he wrote.
Sometimes the reasons for non-inclusion are obvious — Stryker has simply eliminated all but the best composed or least blurry in a series of similar shots — but in other instances there is a clear desire to editorialize the slice of life being presented by the project, for a cleaner, more edited version of history.
Surf-centric site The Inertia reviewed and lauded the VISSLA 7 Seas, concluding that it'd be hard to find a better mix of sex appeal," — they're a zealous bunch, but I'll editorialize here and second that it is a pretty handsome-looking suit — "comfort and utility, so long as the suit is warm enough for where you're surfing.
The media, to the extent they pay any attention at all, will label the candidate as a self-serving narcissist, rather than a person who has principles and a platform, and then editorialize against her participation in the presidential debates or in the election at all, as the New York Times did twice in 2000, referring to Nader as cluttering the field.
The hallmark of his presence on TV and radio—where, every weekday, beginning just an hour after "First Take" goes off air, he hosts the two-hour "Stephen A. Smith Show" —is his ability not only to talk but to editorialize, at length, and more or less extemporaneously, about any topic tossed his way, like a juggler whose every bauble is an item of current events.
While some of these resources editorialize their databases, others allow conference hosts to submit and advertise their own conferences.
The "core writings" and various notes were put together in a logical fashion by various editors. The main editor was Gilbert L. Johnson. Johnson along with Linda Lee, Dan Inosanto and other students of Bruce Lee helped him understand Jeet Kune Do well enough to editorialize and organize Lee's material into text. The book is dedicated to: The Free, Creative Martial Artist.
Peak circulation of The Correspondent was about five thousand subscribers, but these were sufficiently effective in national affairs that LIFE magazine, still a Henry Luce product, roused itself to editorialize against it. Nonetheless, the Committee of Correspondence managed never to be attacked as a pro-Soviet group. Its writers and board of editors were too prominent and recognized for such a charge to be credible.
One very famous example is John Ruskin's Seven Lamps of Architecture and The Stones of Venice. Critics may base their assessment on a range of theoretical positions. For instance, they may take a Feminist or Freudian perspective. Unlike other individuals who may editorialize on subjects via websites or letters written to publications, professional critics are paid to produce their assessment and opinions for print, radio, magazine, television, or Internet companies.
At presentation about Sunken Villages along the St. Lawrence River Helbig's style has been described as teetering between documentary and abstract.Michael Whyte, Toronto Star, 2009 Helbig's approach whatever the subject is not to editorialize but to use his imagery to provide viewers the space, in their own imaginations, to reflect, imagine and think for themselves. His work is held in the Ontario Government Art Collection. He was elected to the Ontario Society of Artists in 2010.
The Democratic-Republican Party invented campaign and organizational techniques that were later adopted by the Federalists and became standard American practice. It was especially effective in building a network of newspapers in major cities to broadcast its statements and editorialize its policies.Jeffrey L. Pasley. "The Tyranny of Printers": Newspaper Politics in the Early American Republic (2003) Fisher Ames, a leading Federalist, used the term "Jacobin" to link members of Jefferson's party to the radicals of the French Revolution.
He uses the term "data-ink ratio" to argue against using excessive decoration in visual displays of quantitative information. In Visual Display, Tufte explains, "Sometimes decoration can help editorialize about the substance of the graphic. But it is wrong to distort the data measures—the ink locating values of numbers—in order to make an editorial comment or fit a decorative scheme." John Snow's map of the 1854 cholera outbreak in Soho Tufte encourages the use of data-rich illustrations that present all available data.
Sloan was attracted to the rooftop tableaux visible from his eleventh-floor studio on Sixth Avenue in Greenwich Village. He could look down upon people unselfconsciously going about their daily business, their vivacity making them as fascinating as characters on a stage, performing for an audience of one. All the members of the Ashcan School studiously avoided sentimentality, letting their vigorous slice-of-life images speak for themselves. Even Sloan, the most politically sensitive of the group as an active socialist, refused to editorialize with his paintings.
Soon after The Times-Picayune was able to restart publication following Hurricane Katrina, the newspaper printed a strongly worded open letter to President George W. Bush in its September 4, 2005, edition, criticizing him for the federal government's response the disaster, and calling for the firing of Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) chief Michael D. Brown. Brown tendered his resignation eight days later. The Times-Picayune long continued to editorialize on FEMA.A new start at FEMA, Times-Picayune, April 14, 2009, Saint Tammany Edition, p. B4.
He also was among the first broadcasters in the United States to editorialize. McLendon especially attracted attention for his stern denunciations of French president Charles De Gaulle, whom he described as "an ungrateful four-flusher" who could "go straight to hell." The McLendon family sold KLIF in 1971 to Fairchild Industries of Germantown, Maryland, for $10.5 million, then a record price for a radio station. By 1979 the family had sold all of its broadcasting properties, including fourteen radio and two television stations, worth approximately $100 million.
Sue's personal life is also explored over the course of the season. She has a commentary feature on the local television news, "Sue's Corner", which she uses to editorialize on issues such as littering and support for caning. She falls in love with news anchor Rod Remington (Bill A. Jones), but their burgeoning relationship comes to an abrupt end when she discovers he is sleeping with his co-anchor, Andrea Carmichael (Earlene Davis). In the episode "Wheels", Sue allows Becky Jackson (Lauren Potter), a freshman with Down syndrome, to join the Cheerios.
He was also a member of the Peabody Awards Board of Jurors from 1940 to 1942.The Peabody Awards - George Foster Peabody Awards Board Members On March 1, 1952, Dabney guest starred on the CBS live variety show, Faye Emerson's Wonderful Town, in which hostess Faye Emerson visited Richmond to accent the kinds of music popular in the city. In the 1950s, Dabney's editorials took on a more conservative tone. Although he was personally opposed to Massive Resistance against desegregation of Virginia's public schools, the owners of the Times- Dispatch did not allow him to editorialize against it.
In the 1990s he went on to develop a highly personalized and controversial style of carving, using masks to comment and editorialize contemporary history and society. He came to believe that "tradition is a foundation to build upon, not a set of rules to restrain creativity." Examples of these masks are the "Mask of International Commerce," which was exhibited in London, England for the Royal Opening of Canada House, and the "Mask of the Injustice System," which was exhibited at the 1999 Venice Biennale.Szeemann, Harald and Cecilia Liveriero Lavelli. La Biennale di Venezia: 48a Esposizione internazionale d'arte.
Up the Yangtze was very well received by film critics, and was described as "astonishing" documentary which "refuses to editorialize" by The New York Times. It garnered a 96% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 47 reviews, and a rating of 84 on Metacritic. The film appeared on several critics' top ten lists of the best films of 2008. Ella Taylor of LA Weekly named it the 3rd best film of 2008 (along with Still Life), Rick Groen of The Globe and Mail named it the 7th best film of 2008, and Liam Lacey of The Globe and Mail named it the 10th best film of 2008.
The Zapple doctrine was part of a specific provision of the fairness doctrine, an FCC policy which required broadcasters to present multiple viewpoints about controversial issues of public importance. The fairness doctrine of 1949 allowed station licensees to editorialize, provided that more than one perspective was included in their overall programming. This was a departure from prior policy under the Mayflower doctrine, which did not allow any editorial content. The Zapple doctrine pertained to a particular sort of political speech situation, when a candidate or his supporters buy air time to support the candidate, or criticize his opponent, but the candidate himself does not actually appear in the broadcast.
In 1882, Churchill changed the title of her newspaper to the moniker The Queen Bee a name that represented her as much as her publication, as the editor and majority voice of the newspaper.Beeton (1986), 65 The paper had grown in circulation, and Churchill was able to increase publications from monthly to weekly editions. Each paper consisted of many of the same types of writings featured in her travel literature, and also included stories relating to women from other newspapers. Churchill consistently used her platform to editorialize her experience as a female traveler and specifically female journalist; she believed that most publications were specific to the needs and rights of men, not women.
In 1899, the Soko Nihon Shinbun (San Francisco Japanese News) merged with a second Japanese language newspaper, the Hokubei Nippo (North American Daily), to form the Nichibei Shimbun. By 1910, the Nichibei was the leading Japanese paper in the area, and by the 1920s it had San Francisco and Los Angeles editions and was read by some 25,000 households across the Western United States. Continuing his advocacy work in the Japanese immigrant community, Abiko used the paper to editorialize in favor of "morality education" for migrant laborers, encouraging them to settle permanently in the United States and establish families in their new homeland. Abiko continued to run the Nichibei until his death in 1936, after which his widow, Yona, took over.
Two days later Booth was arrested for aiding and abetting the release of a fugitive slave in violation of the Fugitive Slave Act. Rather than deny his role in inciting the mob action, Booth charged that the law was unconstitutional, and rather than see the rights of a trial by jury nullified he said he would "prefer to see every federal officer in Wisconsin hanged on a gallows." After such inflammatory rhetoric U.S. Commissioner Winfield Smith set Booth's bail at $2000, which his supporters paid immediately, freeing Booth to not only continue his battle against the slave law, but to again editorialize in favor of a statewide anti-slavery convention. Other state newspapers concurred, and on June 9 Booth called for a mass meeting on July 13 at the Wisconsin State Capitol in Madison.
XGRS was a Shanghai-based radio station broadcasting on both shortwave and medium wave which was owned and operated by the German government in Japanese- occupied China during World War II. Originally established as a German- language station designed to provide news and information to German residents of China, in 1940 it began broadcasting a multilingual program schedule with alternating broadcasts in English, German, Chinese, Russian, Japanese, and Hindi. It operated from the Kaiser Wilhelm School. Beginning in 1940 Erwin Wickert was the effective manager of the station, occupying the formal post of radio attaché at the German consulate in Shanghai. Peter Waldbauer, an English-speaking Austrian, hosted the program A Briton's Point of View, during which he feigned to be a Briton and would editorialize an anti-Allied perspective.
The Babbses had views that were in line with these programs: in 1983, when interviewed by a news service reporter, Charles claimed that "the white man is supposed to protect the other races" and called the Federal Reserve System "the Jew-controlled money standard". The Babbses' rejection of the government-assigned value of money resulted in them refusing to pay their 1981 property taxes to Gray County, where its transmitter tower was located; advertisers fled as they were garnished for the station's actions. In addition, when Nellie Babbs was interviewed by KAKE-TV and claimed that Rosanne Cash had anti-Semitic views, Cash sued for $3 million, saying she was erroneously quoted. The content of these taped programs prompted KGNO, one of KTTL's competitors in Dodge City, to editorialize against the programs of KTTL, calling them "crap".
The result was a dozen convictions and a storm of outraged public opinion that threw the party from power and gave the Jeffersonian Republican press renewed confidence and the material benefit of patronage when the Republicans took control of the government in 1800. The Republican party was especially effective in building a network of newspapers in major cities to broadcast its statements and editorialize in its favor. Fisher Ames, a leading Federalist, blamed the newspapers for electing Jefferson: they were "an overmatch for any Government ... The Jacobins owe their triumph to the unceasing use of this engine; not so much to skill in use of it as by repetition."Noble Cunningham, The Jeffersonian Republicans: 1789–1801 (1957) p 167 The newspapers continued primarily party organs; the tone remained strongly partisan, though it gradually gained poise and attained a degree of literary excellence and professional dignity.
Theodore was afterwards struck by great fear, and in his shock was unable to rise from his bed for the next several days. Gregory goes on to editorialize on the encounter, saying that the apparition was a sign of Saint Peter's favor towards Theodore: "The blessed Apostle wished to show those who served him that whatever they did for his honor, he always and unceasingly observed it, for the recompense of their reward." When the interlocutor of the Dialogues, Peter the Deacon, questions why Theodore would have been shocked and sickened by having seen Saint Peter, Gregory replies with a citation from Scripture in which the prophet Daniel is likewise shocked into illness by a troubling vision: "And I Daniel languished, and was sick for some days: [...] and I was astonished at the vision, and there was none that could interpret it" (). Gregory mentions Theodore alongside another saintly sacristan of St. Peter's, Abundius.

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